Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Asian voters crucial in Georgia races

They make up just 3.2% of the electorate in this rapidly diversifyi­ng state, but their voices may be decisive

- By Jenny Jarvie and Jennifer Haberkorn Jarvie reported from Suwanee and Haberkorn from Washington. Special correspond­ent Erin Woo in Duluth contribute­d to this report.

SUWANEE, Ga. — When Stephanie Cho moved from Los Angeles to Atlanta seven years ago, she was dismayed to find Asians largely absent from Georgia’s political life — barely contacted by Republican or Democratic parties or represente­d in government corridors.

Lobbying at the state Capitol in 2015 when she became executive director of the Atlanta chapter of Asian Americans Advancing Justice, or AAAJ, she typically saw just two Asian faces: Korean-born Republican state Rep. B.J. Pak and a member of his staff.

Fast-forward five years, Georgia will have six Asian American state representa­tives — five of them Democrats — when the Legislatur­e convenes in January.

After Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders helped Joe Biden beat President Trump by a razor-thin margin of 12,000 votes in this state, Cho and a new generation of activists are ramping up their work to mobilize their community to vote for Democrats Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock in twin runoff races that will determine which party controls the U.S. Senate next year.

“The Asian American population in Georgia is coming of age just now,” Cho said. “You have newer population­s of Asian Americans across the board. Already, I see it’s very rapidly changing.”

Asian Americans make up just 3.2% of Georgia’s voting-eligible population — compared with about 15% in California — but they are playing an increasing­ly pivotal role in shaping the politics of this once-conservati­ve and rapidly diversifyi­ng Southern state.

Turnout among Asian Americans in Georgia doubled from about 67,000 in 2016 to 140,000 in the 2020 presidenti­al election — a faster rate of growth than Latino, Black or white voters. More than 6 out of 10 Asian American and Pacific Islander voters cast their ballots for Biden, according to exit polls.

At the same time, the overall Asian voter turnout rate of 58% still lags behind that of white voters, largely because of a lack of voter engagement and mobilizati­on, as well as low English proficienc­y. In a state where overall turnout is about 66%, the rate is 70% for whites, 57% for Black voters and 42% for Latinos.

Among the reasons for the higher number of Asian voters this year is that a new generation has turned 18, more recent immigrants became U.S. citizens, and transplant­s arrived from other states.

But voter mobilizati­on is playing an even bigger role: 80,000 new Asian American voters registered in Georgia in the last four years, nearly doubling the turnout rate. “The surge in Asian American turnout — especially amongst first-time, younger Asian American voters — helped Biden flip the state,” said Sam Park, Georgia’s first Democratic Asian state representa­tive, elected in 2016. “If Rev. Warnock and Jon Ossoff are to be successful, turnout amongst the Asian American community will be critical.”

Across the northern suburbs of Atlanta, young 20somethin­g activists have set up voter registrati­on booths at Indian supermarke­ts, Vietnamese bubble tea stores and Korean churches. They are roaming suburban culde-sacs and modern apartment complexes that just a decade or two ago were rural farmland, urging Asians to vote for Ossoff and Warnock.

In the three months before the general election, Asian American activists with AAAJ reached out to 92% of Georgia’s estimated 238,000 eligible Asian American voters by phone.

Although activists did not knock on doors before Nov. 3 because of the pandemic, they have shifted strategy for the runoffs. Given the close margin of Biden’s victory, the high stakes of the Senate races and the confusion many voters have about runoff elections, the Asian American Advocacy Fund aims to knock on 100,000 doors before Jan. 5.

“Now we don’t have the villain we’re trying to defeat in the White House, the persuasion is really important at the doors,” said Aisha Yaqoob Mahmood, the fund’s director. “We’re trying to explain that this election is even more important than what they just did in November.” Both Ossoff and Warnock have dedicated staffers focused on Asian American and Pacific Islander outreach, and have appeared at a string of meetand-greets with Asian American voters. Since Nov. 3, the Ossoff campaign has made more than 100,000 calls targeting the Asian American and Pacific Islander community.

Outreach is also happening with Republican­s. While the campaigns of incumbent Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler declined to provide specifics, Republican National Committee spokespers­on Kara Caldwell said in a statement that Asian Americans were Georgia’s fastest-growing population and the RNC was “working tirelessly to ensure their voices are heard by door knocking and phone banking.”

Republican California Rep.-elect Michelle Steel, who was born in South Korea, plans to visit Georgia this month to mobilize Asian American voters, seeking to generate the same enthusiasm that helped her f lip a House seat in Orange County from Democratic control.

She hopes Georgia voters will see themselves reflected in her story as a first-generation Asian American elected official. “This is really important. So I’m going do my part,” she said.

The level of Asian outreach in Georgia is unpreceden­ted, given the relatively small size of the population, said Bernard Fraga, a professor of political science at Emory University who specialize­s in voter turnout.

“Even if only white people voted in California, Democrats would still win,” Fraga said. “In Georgia, obviously, that’s not the case. Democrats feel that they need to have a broad, multiracia­l coalition in order to win Georgia. They can’t just rely on white voters. .… That’s relatively rare.” For some activists, like Cho, it feels like “Georgia is California 30 or 40 years ago.”

Comparing Asian American political participat­ion in Georgia with California is tricky, given that the first major wave of Asian immigratio­n started during the California Gold Rush in the 1850s, said Pei-te Lien, professor of political science at UC Santa Barbara, who specialize­s in Asian political participat­ion and representa­tion.

By 1980, Lien noted, California already had 68 Asian elected officials on school boards, city councils, county boards, in the state Legislatur­e, statewide offices and Congress. Yet Georgia has something that California did not have back then: local grass-roots advocacy groups like the AAAJ and Asian American Advocacy Fund focused on consolidat­ing power.

“Even 20 or 30 years ago,” Lien said, “California didn’t have this kind of sustained community-based Asian American infrastruc­ture.”

Activists emphasize that the work that’s gone into engaging and mobilizing Asian Americans in Georgia did not happen overnight.

“This was years in the making,” said Park, who in 2016 managed to defeat a three-term Republican incumbent in Gwinnett County.

Working with Stacey Abrams, then the minority leader in the Georgia House, Park launched a multilingu­al operation to phonebank and canvass in Vietnamese, Korean and Chinese, as well as Spanish, to reach young and minority voters seen as less likely to turn out and who had rarely been contacted by political parties before.

A year later, when Ossoff challenged Republican Karen Handel for Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District seat, he recognized the potential power of Asian Americans, setting up a field office targeting the community in the northeast Atlanta suburb of Johns Creek and appearing at an Asian American block party and meet-and-greets with Asian voters.

California Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park), who traveled to Georgia for a few days in 2018 to help Abrams’ campaign with its Asian American mobilizati­on, said the outreach was worth it. A recent national survey, she noted, found that half of Asian Americans said they had not been contacted by the Republican or Democratic parties in the past year.

“If you do reach out” to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, Chu said, “it’s like gold. They haven’t had contact before. When you do have that contact, it is very impactful.”

In Georgia, much of the on-the-ground outreach has been led by youth activists — 25 and younger — who see the U.S. through a different lens than their parents and grandparen­ts.

“They saw how their parents worked really hard to assimilate, and it really didn’t necessaril­y get them any more respect or power,” Cho said. “So what can they do differentl­y to actually effect change?” On a chilly Saturday morning, Angie Thuy Tran, a 26-year-old Vietnamese American activist, put on a white KN95 mask and a plastic face shield and walked briskly around a Gwinnett County subdivisio­n, knocking on doors in an effort to get out the vote.

Gwinnett, a once-rural conservati­ve county that has seen the white share of its population plummet from 96% to 35% in the last 40 years, is now one of the most diverse suburban counties in the nation, with a population that is 30% Black, 22% Latino and 12% Asian.

“Xin chào!” — hello — she said brightly as she approached a middle-aged man sitting in a Lexus sedan in the driveway outside a two-story brick home.

The man rolled down his window and smiled as Tran spoke in their native tongue. But as soon as she asked if she could count on him to vote for Ossoff and Warnock, he shook his head.

Tran was not surprised. As a Vietnamese American community organizer for the Asian American Advocacy Fund, she knows older Vietnamese Americans lean conservati­ve.

She thanked him politely, tapped on her cellphone to mark him as “strongly opposed,” and marched on to the next house, confident she would find Indians, Bangladesh­is and maybe younger Vietnamese and Koreans open to voting for Democrats.

Nationally, Asian American voters favored Biden by a more than 2-to-1 margin. Many Asian Americans have been turned off by Trump’s rhetoric against immigrants and his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, including his derogatory references to the “China virus” and “Kung flu.”

Cecelia Yoo, 70, a firstgener­ation Korean immigrant, said she supported Trump before the pandemic but voted for Biden this year because she did not think the president had handled the crisis well.

“Trump lost credibilit­y and leadership,” she said Sunday in Korean through an interprete­r at St. Andrew Kim Catholic Church, a red brick former Baptist church in Duluth.

Yoo planned to vote for Ossoff and Warnock in the runoff, “to restore democracy and justice,” but did not align herself with Democrats or Republican­s. “I’m supporting people,” she said, “not parties.”

But some of Trump’s remarks and positions have also garnered intense support from some older Vietnamese and Koreans who despise communism.

Cao Thái Ha i,65, a quality control manager who this summer co-founded the Vietnamese American Republican­s of Georgia, said many conservati­ve Vietnamese immigrants did not feel engaged in U.S. politics until Trump began denouncing socialism — and China, “our enemy.”

Even though Tran is a much younger, Democratic­leaning activist, she understand­s the older generation’s fear of communism.

Raised in Vietnam’s Binh Dinh province, a battle zone during the Vietnam War, Tran’s early life was shaped by communism: Her grandfathe­r was a military commander for South Vietnam under the U.S. who was jailed for 10 years by the communists. Walking to school as a young girl, she passed multiple graveyards.

But Tran, who moved to the multicultu­ral Atlanta suburban hub of Doraville when she was 8, has also been shaped by growing up alongside other low-income immigrants. After she was a student at one of the most diverse high schools in the nation, she became more political while attending a liberal arts college in Tennessee where she said she and other minority students were harassed for not being “American.”

As Tran and a fellow canvasser traipsed through Gwinnett’s sprawling subdivisio­ns, clutching f liers in English, Vietnamese, Mandarin and Korean, many on their list were not home or did not open their doors. Those who did answer were often undecided or wary of delving into politics.

It was not long, though, before they came upon Avni Sinojia, 44, a data analyst who was born in the U.K. to Indian parents. She said that they could count on her to support Ossoff and Warnock and that she had already applied for her absentee ballot.

“The South has been historical­ly Republican,” she said, “and we need to see a change.”

Still, she mused, her vote could be canceled out by that of her pharmacist husband, an independen­t who voted for Trump and typically aligned with Republican­s. She had already reminded him about his absentee ballot, but he was very busy.

“I just hope he stays so busy,” she said, “he forgets to vote.”

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? KEVIN WONG, a field captain with Asians for Ossoff and Warnock, passes out handouts printed in several Asian languages to Democratic volunteers who will canvass in Suwanee, Ga. The Senate runoffs are Jan. 5.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times KEVIN WONG, a field captain with Asians for Ossoff and Warnock, passes out handouts printed in several Asian languages to Democratic volunteers who will canvass in Suwanee, Ga. The Senate runoffs are Jan. 5.

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